When your Emulab account is created, we create an SFS public/private
key pair for you and store the public part in our database. Your
private key is stored in your ~/.sfs directory, and just like your
Emulab generated SSH
key, there is no passphrase protecting your SFS key; you should not
reuse this key anywhere else. It is fine to copy this private key back
to your home machine, but only if your home machine is
secure and your home directory is not NFS mounted on a public network!
This will allow you to access your experimental nodes without having
to first log into users.emulab.net. Either way, accessing
your experimental nodes is easy. When you are logged into
users.emulab.net:
sfsagent
cd /sfs/netbed/nodeA.myexp.mypid
If instead you have copied your emulab private key to your home
machine, and have added it to your agent, then you can add the
following certprog to your agent:
sfskey certprog -p netbed dirsearch \
/sfs/ops.emulab.net:eu7f8hmfpxk54t4uqdhpkhy7qtwqx7fn/q/proj/.sfs
cd /sfs/netbed/nodeA.myexp.mypid
As with SSH public keys, we distribute SFS public keys to all of the nodes in your experiment (for all of the users in your project or group). This allows anyone in your project to access the fileystems on all of the experimental nodes. Further, when your experimental nodes boot for the first time, a new SFS host key is generated and passed back to ops.emulab.net. These host keys are used to generate the /sfs/netbed directory so that you see the same view of your nodes, no matter where you are logged in.
You can also use the SFS rex program to log into your nodes
(or to users.emulab.net). Rex is the SFS equivalent of SSH;
once you have started your SFS agent, rex will forward your private
keys, much like SSH forwards your private keys when you use it to log
in to another node. To log into one of your experimental nodes with
rex:
To rex into users.emulab.net:
sfsagent
rex -x /sfs/netbed/nodeA.myexp.mypid
sfsagent
rex -x /sfs/netbed/users.emulab.net
As with SSH keys, you may also upload the public parts of your own SFS keys. We store those public keys in our database, and distribute them to all of the nodes in your experiments. This is better and safer than copying the Emulab generated key back to your home machine, since generally your own keys are passphrase protected and secure from theft when on a (semi)public network. You may add and delete SFS public keys from your user profile by going to the Update User Information page.